[paper Service aet, Carrboro |)ffice: Hill News Leader CHAPEL Leading With The News in Chapel Hill, Carrboro, Glen Lennox and Surrounding Areas Anyone For Kittens? "Kittens make wonderful pets,” says the ad. "See them at " For the full story see this and other classified ads on Page Seven, this issue. ■ 6 CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 1956 EIGHT PAGES THIS ISSUE THE YELLOW Ing downtown day ly, the work crew- Ig enough to specu- nuch paint the job ley figured a little lart was soaked up led feet of “no park- We’ve noticed a llewall tires around last couple of days (nting. Iaphical error caused more than Ikes to court follaw- |d-oft tor the docket Recorder’s session Herald day before Fad; “Raleigh James stop sign, $10,000 J.nd we thought the |is tough on traffic , former chap- UNC alumni now Amalie, is the own- pink Cadillac with dlop that’s caused around town in the Mr. Beam and F'her, Mike, are car Virgin Islands now. |el hill athletic had a fine trip to ; Tuesday night—all 80 seconds of the 50 of the local Tar oostcrs traveled via to Reynolds Colise- good block of seats . On the way hack off at Procscher's • a late supper. KING OF BASKET sere was one strik- )leau on the side- he fracas after the Forest game here m the fighting broke rushed to the Caro- combo and asked 'Humanize' Pharmacist Is Aim For Five Years starting in 1960 pharmacists will have to go to school five years to gel a degree at UNC. More non - technical studies W'ill. be required—the humani ties. No additional pharmacy and c'.iemistry courses will be :given beyond those presently demanded. Instead, the students ■ will take more languages, his tory. economics and the like. The idea may be to “humanize the pharmacist,’ As A'dlai Stevenson once said; “MIT and Harvard complement each other well; at one you can humanize the scientist and at the other simonize the humanist.” Further Progress Being Made In Program For Annexation FACULTY CLUB OFFICERS—Newly-elected ol -icers of the University Faculty Club, chosen Tues day for the coming year, are shown with Dean Edward A. Brecht (center) of the University's Phar- maev School, outgoing president. Prof. Alexander Heard (left, seated) is the new president and Libra- macy School, outgoing president. - u ■ l r» rian Andrew H. Horn is secretary. On th6 board of governors are Profs. Joel J. Carter, Herbert Baer, Eard Slocum, and (not shown) Arthur Roe, and N. N. Luxon. Students Try 'sCARble' —Intellectual Game A couple of students at the University of North Carolina came across an “outstanding new intellectual” word game to help riders pass the time in a car non-condueive to conversa-- tion. They call it “sCARble.” The game: Take the letters from the North Ca olina licen ses on the cars that pass and think of words that begin with those letters, vvitiout repeating the same words twice. Faculty Is Proposing Presidency Prospects Members of the University facul ty faculty have been invited to suggest pel sons for the permanent Presidency of the University to .ip (he Star Spangled Trustees Committee on selec- ad put their instru- 1 pre.sident. „ D. D. Carroll, Chairman of the Faculty Committee on the Presi dency, sent a notice, to this effect to the faculty last weekend. Rec ommendations are being sent to Mr. Carroll, accompanied by b'og* raphical data and an evaluation giving reasons for the noniinat.on of the presidential candidate. xcept one horn toot il,” said Kay. Horn to put instrument confessed sheeplish- now it.” :s, SON OF MR. AND I )oks, has joined the ms staff of the Du- 7 in Wilmington, De- he will be producing s for DuPont publi- he past several years in Assistant Editor of be official Boy Scout New York City. His s 1436 Kynlyn Drive, , Del. ARS. JOHN CONNOL- Jane Dicks) recently kyo and had as their in the Sukiyaki Room Rolfe and Rosemary xpect to return to in April. Rolfe is on pes. He reports that 1 Tokyo is enough. N ALEXANDER AND I souls well-versed in lines, got quite a bap- om last night during |iour stint of distri- Pre-campaign political activities continued at a high pitch this* week in Orange County with the entry of a third man in the race for the State Senate and the eli mination of two strong potential candidates for the seat which Alamance’s Ralph Scott has held for the past six years. ^ , I At the same time, the Orange Prqf. Alexander Heard has been nors. Prof. Earl S.ociim is a ho - young Democratic Club elected President of the Universi- over member of the Board. • Organized in 1939, the Club has a membership of 215. Alex Heard Elected Faculty Club President No Speculation Yet On 6oard; Rally Planned ty Faculty Club for the coming year, .succeeding Dean Edward A. Brecht of the Schpol of Pharmacy. New officers of thti organization, elected at the Club’s luncheon meeting this week, will take over immediately. Prof. Heard, a mem ber of the Department of political Science faculty, is a past treasurer of the Club. Dean Biecht will au tomatically be on the grobp’s. Board of Governors this coming year. Wild cots End Season Friday launched an intensive membership drive and announced plans for an old-fashioned political rally ten tatively scheduled for the last week in April. A supper meeting to discuss plans for the event will be held Friday March 2, at 6:30 o’clock at Colonial Inn in Hillsboro and PROCLAIMING HEART SUNDAY—Mayor R. B. Todd (left) of Carrboro, shown above with John F. McLaughlin, Carrboro Mills official, has proclaimed this Sunday as Heart Sunday in Carrboro, as it will be similarly observed in the rest of the community. Bob Cox, Chairman of the American Heart Association's fund drive locally, has named Mr. McLaughlin to head the campaign in Carr boro. A house-to-hoUse solicitation will be conducted this Sunday. News Leader Photo Red Cross Division Chairmen Are Announced For Fund Drive split their YDC leaders met Monday at The two * Pines and selected Odell H. Clay- MOZART TICKETS Tickets are still available tor the Friday evening concert of the Moiart Piano Festivai to be held at 8 p.m. in Memorial Hall. Climaxing the vreek's Festival activites, the Friday concert will feature Boris Goldovsky, Master of Ceremonies of the Metropoli tan Opera News of the Air, and Genia Nemenoff and Pierre Lo- boshuti, concert duo-pianists. Tickets are now on sale at Kemps, Ledbetter-Piekard and Graham Memorial and will be on sale at the door. A game with unbeaten Hender son there tomorrow evening will 7:30. All interested Democrats are close t h e season’s ..basketball being invited to attend this plan- schedule for Chapel Hill High. ning session. In his annual report to the Club . , tie President reviewed the pro- Wildcats grams held at the 19 bi-weekly ,i. h' h meetings Ih^ past year and noted eole was seiera c m need* that dropping Tuesday’s, encounter with ^ rkiTsed to, head publicity. Prof. hv the Roxhoro there, 61-53. W'ith a 10-5 ' George Nichalson- and Gordon dvmnnsmm for record for the season to date, the' Cleveland will head the. Distin- Club to the Carolina Symposium for guished Guests committee. a partial sponsorship of this or- in the eight-team Distnict III loop. ganization. , ,, Roxboro bounced Chapel Hill out Ot ler olficers elected for the beating them Tues- coniing year are: Univer.sity Li- brarian Andrew H. Horn, Secre- However, Coach Bob Culton is licly that they would not be can tary, succeeding J. Maryon Saun- over his team’s chances in didates for the Senate. Both had dcis; Prof. Herbert Baer, Treas- District tournament at North-1 been prominently mentioned in urer; and Profs. N. N. Tjuxon, Ar- High next Wednesday. With ^ precampaign speculation, thur Roe, and Joel J. Carter, new Gordon Blackwell back members of the Board of Cover- action, and the team showing steady improvement lately, the Wildcats could provide some sur- Division chairmen of the Marbh j ty; C. Y. Tilson, rural area; and Z..11 w ....... J j^2 annual fund drive for the , Miss Elizabeth Branson, publicity. general meeting will follow at I can Red Cross were announced to-1 drive_ will be Bill Easnight, H. D. day by Ray Ritchie, over-all chair- Strowd, Albert Rosemond, Dr. man of the campaign. ' Duncan Getsingcr, Joe Augustine, The drive in the business dis- Dr. W. T. Kuhn, Frank Blocksidge trict will begin tomorrow and con-'Jr., Bill Olsen Jr., Whid Powell, tinue for one week, under the Charlie • Stancell, Earl Blackburn, leadership ot Ted Danziger. In Raymond G. Knight, David L. Fon- Carrboro the campaign will be ville, Buster Ogburn, Jake Con- headed by Mr. . and Mrs. Archie ners, Wallace Williams, Maurice Christopher. , Julian, Gus Culberson, Charles D. The other eight division chair- Nottingham, Bill Alexander, Mrs. men appointed by Mr. Ritchie are: Wilson Lackey, Mr.s. Sidney Wall, Mrs. Roy Arm.strong residential Mrs. H, D. Maynaid, and Mrs. area; J. Maryon Saunders, special Charles Jones, gifts; Harold Weaver) campus.; Campaign headquarters will be Miss Mary Carolyn Cockey, Divis- set up in the Crowell Little Motor ble of Durham wards of Chapel Hill as co-ehair- During the week. County Demo cratic Chairman R. 0. Forrest of Hill.sboro and County Solicitor John Q. LeGrand announced pub Hidden Hills Group Circulating Petition Funlici pioore.s.s towuiid ihe Cihapol Mill Itoanl ol .\lder- nien's move to annex ,i larse east-side area to the munieipal- itv w;i.s reported today wilh the disirlbiuiori of a I'oiir-paSe inl'onnational slalenieiit on the plan to residents ol' tlie 8oo-aeic area. In addition an nnolTicial spokesman for residents of the 40-aa'e Hidden Hills neighborhood said 3n (tnnexalion petition was being di.stribiiled in his area and he felt sure this sector would like to be included in the propo.sed annexation. Earlier this week the owners of the Estes Hills develop ment, located just north of Hid den Hills, said they would seek to become a part of the municipality. Would Be 80% Increase To bring in the two newly- proposed areas, plus the adjoin ing Country CUib-I.aurel Hill- Greenwood-Glen Lennox-Oakwood Rogerson Drives-Ridgefield sec tions would increase the Town’s size by approximately 80 per cent. The Town’s present size is 1190 acres and the new areas, totalling about 950 acres, would bring the total to around 2,150 acres. Fol lowing studies of the costs involv ed in the annexations, plus an estimate, of the additional tax re venue, Town officials have said they felt the annexations would be financially feasible. Last night Alderman Kenneth Putnam and William Alexander personally distributed a mimeo graphed four-page statement from the Board of Aldermen to all residents of Oakwood and Rogerson Drives and Green wood. They said they expected to carry out a similar round in Country Club and Laurel Hill neighborhoods before the week end, and would mail the state ments to all Glen Lennox resi dents. They'll also be given out in Hidden Hills. This document inclutics a state ment ol policy from the Board, a schedule of application of availa- Town services in the new ion of Health Affairs; Mr. and Company next Thursday under areas, a comparison of outside Mrs. Leo Vickers, Negro ^oinmuni- the direction of Mrs. Norman Cor don. ROTARIANS HEAR STUDENT A German exchange student at prises in the play-offs. STRONG'S FATHER DIES C. B. Strong, father of Ray mond Strong, Assistant Director the University, Erhard Kantzen- Fleet Jimmy Dosher was again of Central Records and Reg^istr^ bach, gave a talk on “Economic high .scorer for Chapel Hill, rack Development In West Germany ing up 20 points in both the North- I Since World War II” at last night’s ei n and Roxboro games this week. Rotary Club meeting. He was pre- Gordon Neville wa.s next highest sented by University Dean Fred in both games, scoring 14 against H. Weaver. Mr. Kantzenbach will Northern and 10 against Roxboro. return to the University of Goett-' The Jaycces ■ defeated Northern ingen in Germany next year to 37 to 28 and the girls team drop- complete his college studies in ped their game with Roxboro, 36- economics. tion, died yesterday in a South Bend, Indiana, hospital, following Thursday 8 p.m. “Willie’s Weekend,” CHHS Auditorium for the Schools, 8 p.m. Interiacial Fellow.ship for a heart attack on Tuesday. He the Schools, F-piscopal Parish was 61. Funeral services will be I House, held in South' Bend on Saturday. ! .3.5. Surviving, in addition to Ray mond Strong, are his mother, a brother, and two sisters. Mr. Strong flew to South Bend yesterday. Japanese Girl Does Family's Grocery Shopping " TT i__ _•! 1 4.u_ Ofs/xxv-ifixr TTzVirtM tViii friurlVi avaAp cation information to! By SUSAN ANDES nd Oakwood-Rogerson | first catches your eye in he dogs suspiciously tbc bright face of 13 year-old Ka- sir coming at nearly | ggjjj jg [,er friendly smile. A , Residents of the area | j-gsident of Chapel Hill only since piciously, too—in ma- | Kazuko’s native home is ((jl re they saw them com- j jjokkaido, northern. Japanese is- ey were being driven gusgia, 'atrolman Amos Horne i fgiber, Keyohide Seki, is a Hill police patrol car. ^igiting scholar at the University IRKER, SON OF MR. ^ Rockefeller Grant Fellow- hn W. Parker of the | [,ig ^i£e and staff, had some jazzy children, age 6, 7, 9, and 13, 1 off in his role as ^y boat last fall .hington’s soldiecs at only member of his i in the presentation ^jj^iiiy who could speak English, lentary School of the ^ Ibeir arrival in Chap- Ji original playlet on j.jill Kazuko took over the gro- jj] 5 life. He got an un- shopping for the family and \ ig round of laughter geems to take great joy in ddental line in which ^hore. She generally takes * K sr, in conversation vvith one or more of the other tM e are her favorite subjects, and Mrs. Kazuko was placed in the fifth Recently when the fourth grade White added that she has done grade so that she could receive was studying China, Kazuko some very good mural drawings, j more guidance and English train, brought her chop sticks to class The Japanese school year being ing. In a .Tapanese ; school she and demonstrated how they were so different from ours here (it eX- , would be in the equivalent of the used. She also has tried by tends from April 1 to March 31), sixth or seventh grade. means ot a map to show them the ,jiH ontinonlal Army GI s, children, or is accompanied by her iflij a Revohitionary era parents. is Class Favrite A member of Mrs. Rebecca White’s fifth grade class at the Chapel Hill Elementary School, Kazuko has become the favorite of the class. “The children all love H>®as saying before I was H iterrupfed. . .” •Jj I BY JOHN EHLE AND I John Clayton of the mnications Center, a story called The Ec- II be given again on , , .... . ght at 9:15 over NBC her, and she has been so willing to ' The central character share with us all. She has such a of. Horace Williams, wonderful disposition, said Mrs. I )t the UNC philosophy White, ft famed as “The Gadfly While I was observing in her I *1111.’ This will be a re- class Kazuko was watching with given in respontse to animated glee a science expei i land. It is part of NBC's ment by some of her classmates. Ldventure series. 1 She says that spelling and music, Friday 8 p. m. Mozart Piano Festival, Memorial Hall 8 p.rn. Basketball, UNC vs. Duke, Woollen Gym Saturday 8 p.m. Gymnastics, UNC v.s. State, Woollen Gym Sunday 5 p.m. Mozart Choir Festival, Hill Hall Monday 3 p.m. Garden Club, Institute of Pharmacy Building 7:30 p.m. Aldermen’s hearing on annex, Town Hall LOST AND FOUND Two and one-half-year-old Caro! Cheek, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Cheek, gave her mother^ and a number of other persons who came into contact with her—quite a fright yesterday afternoon. Mrs. Cheek, the former Jean Cald well, and the baby, are staying with Mrs. Floyd Cox on Cot- I tage Lane while Mr. Cheek is I at a Remington Rand School in j Connecticut. Yesterday after- j noon she wandered away ' down toward North Street. Folks I who saw her and wondered j couldn't find out who she was while her mother, in anguish, I searched in vain. It remained for I Ronald Gates, mail truck driver for the Buildings Department, I to take her to the Police De partment from which point the j reunion was affected. FAMILY BUYER—Thirteen-year-old Kaiuke Seki, grocery buyer for her parents and three brothers and sisters, is a favorite of her fifth grade classmates at Chapel Hill Elementary School. She's shown above al the check-out counter in the A and P with Store route used by her family on their trip to America. From their home at Hokkaido they went via air to Sapparo and then to Tokyo, from there by ship to Okinawa and on to Seattle. They flew across the States to New York, and then on to Raleigh-Durham. Mr. Seki is a professor at the University of Hokkaido in Japan arfd he and his family will proh- j ^bly return there this October. I Here his major field is with the Institute for Research in Social ; Science, He is hoping to organize a similar group when he returns to his native country. He has been attending various classes in the Sociology Depart ment and is primarily interested in demography (population prob lems), and studies in the family Mrs. Seki, a petite, vivacious woman, is a college graduate in her own right, and has been sit-1 ting in on classes in English liter-^ ature and sociology here at the University. She and Mr. Seki have been attending the PTA meetings at the school where their child- run attend, and they have been ac- I live participants in the University Award May Go To Scholarship The $200 won by the Universi ty Communication Center as a second place national award in Lie annual Freedom Awards of the Freedom Foundation in Val ley Forge, Pa., will probably go into the newly-initiated Scholar- Manager WIMiam Alexander. News Leader Photo j Cosmopolitan Club. BRAUER HAS 'GOOD NIGHT' Dean John Brauer of the Uni versity Dental School had "a good night” last night, accord ing to an official report this morning from Memorial Hospi tal where he is recovering from a moderate heart attack. Al though he is on the critical list a Hospital official noted that Dr. Bauer was "running the coure of a typical heart patient", adding that with plenty of rest and treatment there was no rea son at this time to expect that he would not recover. His at tack and recovery course was likened to that of President Eis enhower. Dr. Brauer was admit ted to the Hospital on February 15. ship Fund for the Center, ac cording to its Director, Earl Wynn. He noted today that'no final decision had yet been made on the disposition of the Award whic.h was announced yesterday. It was given for the the Ameri can Adventure Serie.s programs written for the Communication Center by John Ehle and direct ed by John Clayton, Two of these programs. “The Storv Ot .\ Poet” (Edgar Allen Poe) and “Appointment At Ford’s” (The Abra.iam Lincoln play present ed over NBC last Thursday night), were entered in the Awards competition. Last year the center received a Certificate of Award from the Freedom Foundation for another series of the American Adventure pro grams. Paul Green of Chapel Hill was given an honor medal in De general category for his new outdoor drama, “Wilderness Road,’ pi educed in the summer at Berea, Ky. versus inside co.st.s to the subur ban residents, and a letter to the Manager Claude Teague, stating the University’s position on exten- .sion of w'ater lines and hydrants to newly-annexed districts. Concerning the Hidden Hills .sit uation, Floyd Hunter said today that an, annexation petition simi lar to the one twice before pre sented from thi.s neighborhood was being circulated and would prob ably be presented to the aider- men at Monday night’s annexation hearing in the Town Hall. No Known Opposition . lie said' he knew of no oppo- sitioh to annexation in this all- residential area. “It might cost us a little more to be in town now but I think we feel that we are a part of Chapel Hill and would like to come an now while the sentiment is more for it,” said Mr. Hunter. Immediately before the Strowd Hill annexation on August 1, 1950, a petition signed by 30 residents of Hidden Hills was presented to the aldermen. It sought annexation along with the Strowd Hill area. However the aldermen, felt this would not be financially feasible then. In July of 1951 the petition was renewed and the aldermen asked Town Manager Rose to make a study of the area at that time, which would net about $1,000 an nually in taxes.. Mr. Rose estima ted it would cost at that time about $2,000 a year, to serve the area. (See ANNEXATION, Page S) Partly cloudy today with increas ing cloudiness tonight and some what warmer temperatures. To morrow mostly .clody and little change in temperature with chance of light scattered showers. High today, 46.52: low tonight, 31-36. High tomorrow in the 50s. High Low R’fall Monday 64 45 .49 Tue.sday 60 29 .00 Wednesday 52 25 .60